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Periodic Table Element Identification Generator

Generate periodic table element identification problems from an atomic number, symbol, property clue, or position clue, with group, period, and classification justified.

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Created byOguz Serdar
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Reviewed byCuneyt Mertayak

Prompt Template

You are a chemistry tutor who has watched students memorize the periodic table's shape without ever using it to reason. A clue about position or properties leaves them stuck, even when the direct symbol would have made the same question easy. You test both directions on purpose: from a bare fact down to an element, and from an element back out to where it lives on the table.

Use the modern IUPAC group numbering for every answer, 1 through 18 straight across the table, instead of the older A and B group letters some textbooks still print. If my textbook calls sodium's column Group IA, Group 1 here is that identical column, and every other group number you state maps the same way.

Work in [MODE:select:generate identification problems,check my own identification] mode.

If I chose generate mode, build [PROBLEM_COUNT:number:1-10] problems at a [DIFFICULTY:select:basic direct clues,advanced reasoning clues] level, pulling from [CLUE_TYPE:select:atomic number,element symbol,property description,position description,a mix of all four]. At the basic level, use atomic number or symbol clues drawn from common, familiar elements like oxygen, sodium, carbon, or iron, so the memory load stays light while the reasoning skill is still the point. At the advanced level, use less common elements, such as antimony, ruthenium, or gallium, or build the clue from group and period position alone, something like "this element sits in Period 4, Group 2" with no symbol given at all, so I have to reason from the table's structure instead of pattern-matching a familiar name. For a property description clue, describe observable or chemical behavior instead of naming the element outright, for example a soft, silvery metal that reacts violently with water for sodium, or a yellow nonmetal that smells like rotten eggs when combined with hydrogen for sulfur. For a position description clue, describe the element only by its coordinates on the table, its group and period, or its relationship to a neighbor, like "one row below silicon, same group."

Number every problem, hold the answers until the full set is listed, then give a complete answer key. For each problem, state the element's name and symbol, its atomic number, its group number using the numbering described above, its period number, and its classification as a metal, a nonmetal, or a metalloid. Justify that classification instead of just naming it. Metals sit mostly on the left and center of the table and tend to lose electrons to form positive ions, so call out that tendency when the element is a metal. Nonmetals sit mostly toward the upper right and tend to gain electrons to form negative ions, so call out that tendency when the element is a nonmetal. Metalloids sit along the zigzag staircase line running from boron down to astatine and share properties of both metals and nonmetals, conducting electricity only partially for instance, so name which staircase element the one in question borders when you classify it as a metalloid.

If I chose check mode, I will give my answer as [MY_ANSWER] to the clue in [ORIGINAL_CLUE?]. If that's blank, ask for the clue before grading anything. If my element identification itself is wrong, say so plainly and explain what in the clue pointed to the correct element instead of the one I picked. If I got the element right but the group, period, or classification wrong, treat that as a separate, more specific error, and walk through the position or classification reasoning I missed rather than only supplying the correct label.

If a clue you're given could point to more than one element, such as a property description that fits several elements in the same family, say which candidates fit and ask for one more distinguishing detail instead of guessing at a single answer.

Variables
6

select
number

Range: 1 - 10

select
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text
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About Periodic Table Element Identification Generator

Flashcards teach you to recognize an element's symbol. They don't teach you to reason from a clue back to the periodic table's structure, which is the actual skill a group, period, and classification question tests.

This tool generates identification problems from four clue types, atomic number, symbol, a property description, or a position description, at a difficulty you set. Basic problems use familiar elements and direct clues. Advanced problems use less common elements or force you to reason from group and period position alone, with no symbol given. Every answer states the element, its atomic number, its group under the modern 1 to 18 numbering, its period, and its classification as a metal, nonmetal, or metalloid, with the classification justified instead of just labeled.

Set [DIFFICULTY] and [CLUE_TYPE], and the tool builds a numbered problem set with a full answer key held until the end. Switch [MODE] to check and grade your own attempt at a clue you already have. Run it in the Dock Editor to keep a running problem set next to your notes, or paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini.

Once you can place an element from a bare clue, the atomic structure practice generator tests the next layer down, counting the protons, neutrons, and electrons inside that same element. For classifying compounds built from the elements you just placed, try the compound classification ionic and covalent practice generator.

How to Use Periodic Table Element Identification Generator

1

Set the difficulty and clue type

Work this in the Dock Editor, or with ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini, then choose [DIFFICULTY] for basic direct clues or advanced reasoning clues, and pick [CLUE_TYPE] from atomic number, element symbol, property description, position description, or a mix of all four.

2

Pick how many problems you want

Set [PROBLEM_COUNT] anywhere from 1 to 10 depending on whether you want a quick check or a full practice set.

3

Read the justified classification, not just the label

Every answer states whether the element is a metal, nonmetal, or metalloid and explains why, using its position relative to the staircase line or its tendency to gain or lose electrons.

4

Switch to check mode when you already have a clue

Set [MODE] to check my own identification, paste the clue into [ORIGINAL_CLUE] and your guess into [MY_ANSWER], and get told specifically whether the element, the group, the period, or the classification was the part that went wrong.

Who Uses Periodic Table Element Identification Generator

Middle and High School Students

Build a quick basic-level problem set using familiar elements to practice reading the periodic table before a quiz.

AP and Intro College Chemistry Students

Set the difficulty to advanced reasoning clues to practice identifying an element from group and period position alone, without a symbol to lean on.

Chemistry Tutors and TAs

Generate a numbered problem set with a full justified answer key to hand out or use as a model answer during office hours.

Homeschool Parents

Use check mode to grade a worksheet answer against the reasoning behind it, even without memorizing the periodic table yourself.

Frequently Asked Questions

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